Virginia Woolf’s first fully realized work of fiction—published in its final, revised form for the first time
A beguiling trio of fantastical and farcical anti-fairy tales about a giantess who builds a magical “cottage of one’s own,” battles a silver-scaled sea monster, and defies governesses and gravity alike
In 1907, eight years before she published her first novel, a twenty-five-year-old Virginia Woolf drafted three interconnected comic stories chronicling the adventures of a giantess named Violet—a teasing tribute to Woolf’s friend Mary Violet Dickinson. But it was only in 2022 that Woolf scholar Urmila Seshagiri discovered a final, revised typescript of the stories. The typescript revealed that Woolf had finished this mock-biography, making it her first fully realized literary experiment and a work that anticipates her later masterpieces. Published here for the first time in its final form, The Life of Violet blends fantasy, fairy tale, and satire as it transports readers into a magical world where the heroine triumphs over sea-monsters as well as stifling social traditions.
In these irresistible and riotously plotted stories, Violet, who has powers “as marvelous as her height,” gleefully flouts aristocratic proprieties, finds joy in building “a cottage of one’s own,” and travels to Japan to help create a radical new social order. Amid flights of fancy such as a snowfall of sugared almonds and bathtubs made of painted ostrich eggs, The Life of Violet upends the marriage plot, rejects the Victorian belief that women must choose between virtue and ambition, and celebrates women’s friendships and laughter.
A major literary discovery that heralds Woolf’s ambitions to revolutionize fiction and sheds new light on her great themes, The Life of Violet is first and foremost a delight to read.
This volume features a preface, afterword, notes, and photographs that provide rich historical, literary, and biographical context.
(Adeline) Virginia Woolf was an English novelist and essayist regarded as one of the foremost modernist literary figures of the twentieth century.
During the interwar period, Woolf was a significant figure in London literary society and a member of the Bloomsbury Group. Her most famous works include the novels Mrs. Dalloway (1925), To the Lighthouse (1927), and Orlando (1928), and the book-length essay A Room of One's Own (1929) with its famous dictum, "a woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction."
Woolf's Violet is an extravagant prank disguised as a biography, written by a young genius who had clearly decided that if she could not fix England, she could at least parody it. It is a triptych of early stories about Violet Dickinson, Woolf's towering, eccentric friend, inflated into a mythic giantess who straddles Somerset and Olympus with equal inelegance.
In the first section, "Friendships Gallery," Violet is born into a Quaker family of suspicious virtue and comic restraint, then grows into a woman who can silence governesses, charm peers, and defy common sense in a single afternoon. She begins her life as a moral warning and ends up as a social tornado, toppling the etiquette of drawing rooms with an honest laugh and a linguistic allergy to final consonants.
"The Magic Garden" relocates her to a world of aristocrats with more titles than sense. There she founds her cottage, a symbol of rebellion, hygiene, and self-sufficiency, while diagnosing the English upper class with terminal spiritual constipation. Violet's passion for drains, roses, and truth becomes the gospel of a new domestic religion. Behind the jokes about sewage and silver spoons lies Woolf's first manifesto for independence, the room of one's own still under construction and smelling faintly of disinfectant.
Then comes "A Story to Make You Sleep," a Japanese fairy tale filtered through British absurdity, in which monsters, crows, and princesses parade through a landscape so ornate it might have been embroidered by satire itself. The tale both mocks and sanctifies Violet as a mythic healer who can cure babies, tame beasts, and turn spiritual chaos into bath-time serenity.
Across all three, Woolf turns biography into farce, friendship into folklore, and laughter into a revolutionary act. The Life of Violet is less a carnival mirror, a glowing exaggeration of women's intellect, vitality, and power to irritate pompous men.
It is also a sly prophecy of the novelist Woolf would become, still laughing, still skewering, still building cottages out of prose. It feels like Virginia Woolf caught herself in the act of becoming Virginia Woolf and decided to make it ridiculous. The book is a mix of parody, affection, and early genius tripping over its own imagination. It is not profound in the philosophical sense but it is gleefully aware of its own absurdity, which is probably more subversive.
Woolf takes the stiff upper lip of Edwardian society and twists it into a smirk. She is not writing tragedy or social realism; she is testing how much nonsense truth can bear.
The young Woolf is already mocking biography, gender roles, and the English obsession with moral improvement. Violet Dickinson becomes a caricature of female vitality in a world built to reward frailty. Woolf clearly adored her subject but also used her as a test dummy for ideas about freedom, friendship, and artistic rebellion. What begins as a joke about tall women and governesses ends as an argument for female self-invention.
Woolf is already suggesting that the world prefers its women polite, pious, and small, while Violet insists on being tall, loud, and inconvenient. The modern world still rewards self-effacement dressed up as modesty, still pretends that intelligence is more charming when it apologizes for itself. Woolf's early mockery of feminine restraint feels timeless because the social machinery she mocked keeps finding new gears.
This wonderful book shows Woolf before she became a monument, when she was still playing, laughing, and sharpening her claws. It is the literary equivalent of watching a future virtuoso rehearse scales on a toy piano, already inventing a new kind of music.
It captures a kind of wild intelligence that later grew into her mature style. It is also genuinely funny, in a way that reminds you how much serious literature depends on a writer’s ability to be unserious at the right moment. The Life of Violet is not a polished masterpiece, but it is a charming act of rebellion dressed as a joke.
Beneath the silliness, she is already rewriting what a woman writer can do with language, power, and laughter. It is not a grand novel, but it is a sly seed, and watching it sprout is part of the pleasure.
If you’re looking for a book written in Woolf’s usual style, know that this is not that. This book is more of a historical artifact that will appeal to those curious about the author’s life. It’s a collection of three stories Woolf wrote about a friend, and it does feel in some ways like listening in on someone else’s inside joke. This edition also contains a lot of research about Woolf’s social circle to augment her writings. As the first known book written by Virginia Woolf, this has substantial academic value, but it’s not a great read in the way that her more mature writing is.
Gratitude to Libro.fm for the enthralling pleasure to experience this audio for review and thanks to narrator Amy Scanlon! Heartfelt kudos to Virginia Woolf, Mary Violet Dickinson, and contemporary literary scholar Urmila Seshagiri for your generous gift to charm readers to be whimsically spellbound with these stories. Long live this early 20th century feminist wit!
30 pàgines de 3 contes inèdits de la meva estimada virginia inspirats en la vida d’una seva amiga íntima (…mmmmm) anomenada Violet Dickinson (els contes els va escriure amb tinta LILA!!!), la seva primera veritable obra ….. només poden obtenir 5 estrelles perquè jo soc una noia senzilla
Laughter is the expression of the comic spirit within us, and the comic spirit concerns itself with oddities and eccentricities and deviations from the recognised pattern. From Woolf’s essay, The Value of Laughter (1905)
The day after the ball is always used by sentimental novelists endowed with words, for an effective contrast; not only does it change the scene and relieve the strain of prolonged attention — I give away these secrets the best in my possession — but it reveals quite naturally a different side of the hero's character. And so it was with my heroine, if a living woman can be called by such a title; and the critics dispute it. From Friendships Gallery
Life of Violet, hailed as a literary discovery, presents Virginia Woolf’s first fully formed works of fiction, three interconnected short stories from 1907, a literary tribute to her friend Violet Dickinson. The stories themselves were known, under the collective title “Friendships Gallery” and a copy held in Woolf’s papers at the New York Public Library. But Urmila Seshagiri, a noted Woolfian and Modernist scholar, discovered a corrected and finalised version of the stories amongst Violet Dickinson’s papers at Longleat House and prepared them for publication.
It has to be said up front that The Life of Violet is somewhat padded-out and really is for university libraries and Woolf completists (that would be me then).
The three stories comprise just 37 pages. This is then complemented with: - preface of 5 pages - dramatis personae (1 page) - a 38 page Afterword - 6 pages of notes on the Afterword - bibliography (3 pages) - a rather unnecessary 1 page index - 14 pages of explanatory notes, explaining ‘obscure’ terms such as (checks notes) Somerset, public house, Rennaisance, Darwin and Good Samaritan - and 17 pages of Textual Notes comparing the 1907 and 1908 typescripts.
And it’s the last of these where Seshagari’s project becomes both clearer and a little questionable, arguing that these changes essentially turned youthful scribblings, typically treated as such by scholars and excluded from any of Woolf’s complete works, into fully formed literature.
But in practice the changes are almost all minor elements of punctuation or typesetting, which do render the 1908 version fitter for publication but don’t really change the literary quality, as Seshagari’s own choice of example illustrates:
As one example, here is a sentence from the 1907 draft:
“For the Sacred Monster made you laugh merely to look at her; so that you must be a happy person to begin with which is a virtue; and she so ordered your house and family and servants and love affairs and money and garden and mor-als, that if you did as she bid you you were bound to prosper in this world, and become a Mayor; and in the next still brighter honours awaited you.”
In the revised 1908 typescript, Woolf alters five punctuation marks to give the sentence greater fluidity. She replaces the institutional- or official-sounding word "honours" with "crowns," a more flexible word with literal, figurative, historical, and fanciful associations:
“For the Sacred Monster made you laugh merely to look at her, so that you must be a happy person to begin with, which is a virtue, and she so ordered your house and family and servants and love affairs and money and garden and morals, that if you did as she bid you, you were bound to prosper in this world, and become a Mayor, and in the next still brighter crowns awaited you.”
(The bold words mostly emphasising the following punctuation marks)
That said lesser Woolf is still well above most authors, and Seshagari has done brilliant work in unearthing the final forms of these literary jewels, and presenting them so beautifully, and her essay on Dickinson and Woolf is worthwhile.
i genuinely have no idea how to think about this. some of it is my own fault for having picked this as my first virginia woolf book: i’ve seen people describe it as an “inside joke” of sorts and i fear i missed the punchline multiple times due to my own ignorance/oversight etc. i think a lot of the actual book went right over my head, the afterword and the commentary helped me understand better so much of the narrative choices and direction this little anthology took, and while i do appreciate it now it begs the question—does the story stand sturdy enough on its own, free of the analysis? i think there’s a little romance to it, if not. overall i do think i appreciated having to actively parse through the ambiguous and intricate (if sometimes odd) storytelling tactics employed here. and well, i can’t say this is a book i minded reading. i love literature! and i especially love books when they’re written by authors who, also, so obviously love literature! i will come back to the life of violet again in a few years, when i’ve greedily gone through all of woolf’s bibliography. (conflicted between 3-4 stars)/5
2,5* Neužkabino manęs šie trys, tarpusavyje susiję, apsakymai. Jųjų veikėja - Virginijo Woolf draugė milžinė Mary Violet Dickenson. Studijuojantiems autorės darbus ar anglų literatūrą gali būti net labai įdomu, o štai man, kad ir mėgstančiai Woolf kūrybą, buvo nuobodoka. Nors ir negalėjau nesimėgauti meistrės proza ;)
Exciting as it was to get my hands on and read this recently discovered early fiction of Woolf, the book itself feels hardly worth the purchase (although it has a rather pretty cover!). I think it's worth noting that The Life of Violet is not an entirely new text as it is being advertised, but the revised typescript of a minor work which has been mostly glossed over in the Woolf canon; Woolf's edits in this version of the text are good, but the differences are mostly to the effect of polishing. The fiction itself encompasses a delightful forty-ish pages of this book, which is supplemented by an afterword of nearly equal length, followed by endnotes on the text (not marked in the text at all, instead employing that wretched and unfavorable method of simply listing the endnotes by page number), a comparison of the recently unearthed 1908 typescript and the original 1907 manuscript, and then endnotes to the afterword (which, bizarrely, are marked). If the organization of this book sounds puzzling and convoluted, or if the massive afterword sounds like overkill, that's because it is, and it is. To me, this feels like a scholar's attempt to own their discovery and leave their mark on the Woolf canon. Seshagiri's editing is okay, but her afterword devotes most of its time to purely biographical details and glosses over some of the most interesting and troubling elements of this text, Woolf's orientalism and Violet's linkages to empire. As for the primary text itself, it is wonderful. Certainly, this work, one of Woolf's earliest pieces of fiction, is not groundbreaking like her later novels, but it is undeniably charming and her wit absolutely shimmers. These three interconnected stories are full of humor and laughter, early feminist musings (including, at one point, Violet's desire to have "a cottage of one's own"), female friendship and giantesses; if it sounds awesome, that's because it is. Altogether an adequate edition of an enjoyable text.
"A daring mock-biography about a heroine who upsets, redirects, converts, and imagines anew the architechtures connecting past to present. These madcap adventures envision worlds shaped by friendship among women."
Without this interpretation by the editor, I wouldn't have had a clue that's what the three stories contained in this volume were about. They are also supposedly connected to form a complete 'story' about Violet, but the third story bears no connections for the average reader, it was like a Japanese fever dream and was incredibly convoluted.
These three stories are previously unpublished early writings by Virginia Woolf, said to be written when she was 20, at least seven years prior to her publishing the beginnings of her notable works. While I understand the academic interest in discovering unpublished early works of any literary great, I feel like there needs to be a pause before rushing these finds to publication and a consideration of the fact that they may have remained unpublished for a reason. Not everything a writer writes is a work of genius. Particularly early writing upon which a writer might still be honing their style and craft.
There is of course evidence in these stories of Virginia Woolf's burgeoning talent:
"...it was summer morning, and a perfectly even sheet of air shifted up and down and smoothed the landscape like some subtle painters medium."
I don't recommend this to readers who are new to Virginia Woolf and thinking this might be a good introduction to her writing. This book is suited to scholars who have a lifelong interest in Virginia Woolf and perhaps die hard fans who have read all of her other work and are curious about her very early writing.
I have previously only read Mrs Dalloway, and I didn't love it, so this wasn't an ideal next step. I am not going to let this deter me though, as I would prefer to experience Virginia Woolf's writing through her published works, rather than these stories that she chose to leave unpublished.
Meg… mildly entertaining. It’s such a short book, with three very short stories written by Virginia Wolf for her friend Violet. But the foreword and after words are almost as long as the actual book content. It was interesting info about the girls and their friendship and the journey of these stories but not really what I was expecting? Mostly just glad this audio book was only 3 hours or so.
The Life of Violet is divided into three parts: The Introduction, the three short stories composed by Virginia Wolf with subsequent edits by Violet and Virginia Wolf, and an afterword by Urmila Seshagir, the editor.
So librarians will undoubtedly be confused about how to classify this work. Is it fiction or non-fiction?
The three short stories comprise less than half of this slim volume. Reading the stories alone takes very little time if you’re inclined to a quick and casual read. But that would be an injustice. Woolf originally wrote the stories in fun for her friend Violet, who is the central and binding character, but she later rewrote them with more serious intent. They reflect the style that later imbues Mrs Dalloway and contain allusions to future fictional characters - based on real people.
The introduction is brief, as introductions ought to be, briefly telling the story of how the publishable manuscript came to light and why it is significant.
The afterword, on the other hand, is a long but highly readable analysis of the work and its place in the Woolf canon.
Woolf writes beautifully, even in this work composed so early in her life and career. Ms. Seshagir’s enthusiasm is infectious and she conveys it well even in the context of the academic treatise that is the afterword.
I thoroughly enjoyed every page of this book and will read it again.
I’m glad this exists for scholastic completion, but I fear it is of limited interest to the common reader. Worse still, the explanatory notes are a frustrating mess - unnumbered, out of order, etc.
How fun to have a newly released work from my favorite author long after she’s gone. I really enjoyed this, maybe especially so having read so many letters between Virginia & Violet.
A cottage of one's own. The ultimate gift for her best friend, a short story written for her. Most ot the audiobook was moreso about how this collection was found and what it means, and that's okay but I had a frustrating time with LibroFM constantly starting the audiobook at the start everytime I played it and I'm not sure if I really took everything in.
I received a copy of this for free from the Princeton University Press (hence no rating). This was an incredible experience reading this and discovering something new, and a fun highlight of my career this year! I wrote about Urmila Seshagiri, the University of Tennessee professor who discovered these stories, for Knox News!
ARC Review- Three early pieces of fiction from Virginia Woolf. Short and whimsical. Followed by an afterword and notes giving the history behind the stories and inspiration for the characters.
In 1907, when she was twenty-five and eight years before publishing her first novel, The Voyage Out, Virginia Woolf wrote three connected, funny stories inspired by her close friend Violet Dickinson, portrayed as a giantess named Violet. A final revised version of these stories was not discovered until 2022, when Urmila Seshagiri brought it to light.
Why did I just tell you about the final revised version? Because there are two versions. The rough draft is held at the New York Public Library, and the hand-corrected typescript is preserved at Longleat House. This fact actually underscores the seriousness with which Woolf approached the project. For many years, it was assumed that these stories were written just to entertain family and friends. But the discovery of the revised version has changed this assumption. She was clearly serious about the work and invested time in writing and revising it.
Woolf in 1907 was still young and experimenting with how to write. She was free to take risks, unaware that her work would later be taken seriously. So she took her shot. Although the stories differ in style and setting, they are united by their humorous tone and by Woolf’s interest in transforming biography, domestic life, and myth into literary experiments rather than conventional narratives. The Life of Violet is a snapshot of becoming. The future Woolf is already visible there.
A central feature of the text is its use of mock biography. It is a form that imitates the structure and language of traditional biography while employing irony, exaggeration, and satire. In this book, Woolf borrows the elevated language of Victorian biography and deploys it for comic effect. The book blends fantasy, fairy tale, and satire, presenting a heroine who resists stifling social traditions. In this sense, the text clearly demonstrates Woolf’s ambition to revolutionize fiction. Across all three stories, she dismantles genre expectations and experiments with the language.
The Life of Violet can easily be read as a lightly disguised portrait of real people from Woolf’s social world. Woolf makes little effort to conceal the wealthy women who inspired her characters, whom she encountered through her friend Violet. Most of these women lived unconventional lives, and Woolf was clearly fascinated by their independence and social confidence. We can say that these stories were not written for a general audience. The characters are not especially relatable, and it is hard to put yourself in their shoes. If you read the text to learn something about the era, Woolf’s early writing style, and to have a good laugh at times, you’re in the right place. But if you want to feel something on a deeper emotional level, that’s not really going to work, because you can’t fully dive in without constantly questioning and wondering. It’s not a book that can absorb you.
Within the stories, Violet almost shapeshifts, reflecting different aspects of her presence in Woolf’s life: giantess, deity, and so on. Woolf was testing how far a life can be stretched before it turns into myth. At the same time, the stories prioritize laughter. Especially making women laugh. An act that can be seen as revolutionary from a feminist perspective.
While this book may not meet the literary standards many readers expect from Woolf, her characteristic fluidity of style is already present. Even before becoming one of the most influential writers of her century, she demonstrates a remarkable ability to find precise words and inventive structures to describe the world. Reading this book can be demanding. The density of the language often requires frequent consultation of a dictionary, especially for non-native English readers. Damn, how can she write so well?!?!
To fully appreciate the book, it must be situated within the social and literary conditions of Edwardian Britain. Women were permitted to write and publish, but their authority as intellectuals was still fragile. Literary ambition was tolerated only within narrow limits, and women’s writing was often judged as decorative and secondary rather than as serious thought. Later, Woolf would mention this. In A Room of One’s Own, she argued that serious writing requires material and psychological independence: time, privacy, and financial security.
“…a woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction.”
Historically, women had been denied these conditions, and their creative lives were shaped by expectations about what women should write, how they should sound, and whom they should serve.
One passage encapsulates her early thoughts on this and show how she paved the way to write that book.
“Do you know it seems to me - well don’t you think Violet - it would be very nice ———”
“To have a cottage of one’s own? Yes, my good woman,” cried Violet.
Here’s another one:
“Violet, once indoors, got out her bible and found some very good reason there for preferring to build her own house with your own hands to living in a house built for you by others.”
As Samuel Hynes describes it, this was a leisurely age in which women wore elaborate hats but had no vote, wealth was openly displayed, and the British Empire appeared stable and permanent.
Within this society, a woman was expected to be gentle, sympathetic, and self-effacing, devoted to smoothing the lives of others rather than asserting her own. The tension between these expectations and Woolf’s creative instincts is already visible in her early work. The stories belong to a moment when women were beginning to enter literary culture but were still expected to conform to strict ideas about tone, subject matter, and ambition. Woolf’s experiments in this text push against the boundaries of what women were expected to produce.
What makes The Life of Violet compelling is not its refinement but its disobedience. At twenty-five, Woolf was still writing without the weight of monumentality, still testing the limits of what she was permitted to do with language. On a more personal level, I really liked seeing that she first of all made herself laugh. She has a decent sense of humor.
The Life of Violet tosses aside old marriage rules, challenges Victorian ideas about women, and celebrates friendship, freedom, and laughter. Basically, it’s Girls Just Wanna Have Fun (Edwardian edition, haha).
My favorite of the three stories is The Magic Garden, since it evokes the Woolfian voice recognizable from her later work. The other two stories didn’t create the same effect for me. So, if you ask me, don’t expect a polished masterpiece. Think of this as Woolf in the making. If you go in expecting perfection from a masterpiece maker, you’ll be disappointed. The editor’s notes play a crucial role in framing the text; without them, the book risks being misread. So thanks to Urmila Seshagiri for her hard work.
Thanks to Princeton University Press for a review copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
Three short children's stories whose main character is a parody of Violet Dickinson, mentor, friend and example for Virginia Wolf, were not what I expected when I started reading. Shock may have prevented me from fully enjoying these stories, but in the meantime I learned much more about Wolf's life and how these writings were only very recently rediscovered by the volume's editor.
Tre brevi storie per bambini che hanno come personaggio principale la parodia di Violet Dickinson, amica mentore ed esempio per Virginia Wolf, non erano quello che mi aspettavo quando ho cominciato a leggere. Lo shock mi ha forse impedito di godermi appieno questi racconti, ma intanto ho imparato molto di piú sulla vita della Wolf e su come queste scritti siano state ritrovate solo molto di recente dalla curatrice del volume.
I received from the Publisher a complimentary digital advanced review copy of the book in exchange for a honest review.
While Woolf fans will be excited to see more Woolf stories that they were unaware of, my biggest takeaway was the subject of the stories, Violet Dickinson. Reputedly 6 foot 2 inches tall, she never married but was by all accounts a spirited and delightful woman, and early friend and mentor to Virginia Stephen, later Woolf. Violet was 17 years older than Virginia and apparently a combination of friend and mother figure.
The stories are a playful and loving pastiche to her friend. The first two are more of a fond appreciation, the last is Virginia acting out a bit of Orientalism in imagining her giant friend as a godlike figure in Japan. (They travelled around the world together with other family members.)
To my mind, what makes this book complete are the introduction and especially the afterword, which sets the context for the book and explains some of the references therein. There are also explanatory notes for some Victorian terms, and a list of textual differences between the final typescript version this book is based on and the more fragmentary draft held at the New York Public Library.
Even though these are short stories, I wouldn't recommend that people start their Woolf with them; they are too fragmentary and too much of a private joke to represent her work. For her more fantastical work I'd recommend her novels Orlando (sex changes and time travel) or Flush (life as seen by a dog).
For dedicated Woolf fans, these are a treat. A little bonus Woolf we didn't know about. Enjoy.
The whole framing of these stories as a recent news item serves to give a misleading importance to the discovery of a manuscript at Longleat. These stories have always been known as Woolf juvenilia - what was discovered is a second manuscript with light amendments such as the addition of a comma for clarity and similar. In that sense, these are not newly discovered stories - and there is a reason why they have been excluded from the Woolf canon: they were probably charming for the recipient and subject, Violet Dickinson, but they're slight and simplistic to other readers.
At around just thirty pages, the stories are bookended by some rather fluffy commentary: the mention of the manuscript by the Longleat archivist (it hadn't been recently discovered) and biographical details of the relationship between Violet Dickinson and Woolf.
The stories themselves are rather forgettable: 'The Life of Violet' is most interesting for the way it prefigures Woolf's Orlando, the funnier, smarter, more reflective, deeper 'love letter' to Vita Sackville-West; the third one, 'A Story to Make You Sleep' foregrounds Woolf's orientalism and, at this stage, unquestioning attitude towards empire.
These stories are so short I can't regret reading them but they are hardly revelatory or of much interest in themselves other than as the juvenilia they have always been.
Reviewed by Trish Palmer for New South Books and Bluewolf Reviews. The excitement generated by The Life of Violet three very early works penned by Virginia Woolf is very special. In 1907 a young Virginia Wolf drafted three stories about a very large lady called Violet. It was only in 2022 that a scholar discovered a final, revised edition of these stories. After carefully checking with all the known collections of Virginia’s work, Urmilla Seshagiri concluded that this was Woolf’s first fully revised literary experience and “a work that anticipates her later masterpieces.” The stories are a blend of fantasy, satire and fairy tale where the heroine defeats sea-monsters and social traditions. The preface is an extraordinary tale. Firstly, it describes Violet on whom these stories are based, but then the author reveals how it came about that this manuscript was located in Longleat House, where it had been archived for eighty years. It was entirely by accident the editor discovered these works. Delays caused by the pandemic and international copyright laws set back her publication. To read Virginia Woolf is a privilege that many have not experienced. This book of short stories is a perfect way to introduce this famous and much heralded author. The Life of Violet contains three stories. Friendship Gallery, The Magic Garden, and A Story to Make You Sleep. There is a Bibliography, Acknowledgements and Explanatory notes at the end of the book.
"...the life of Miss Violet Dickinson is one of the most singular as well as the most prolific and least notorious that was lived in our age."
If anything, this collection made me more curious about the life and times of Violet Dickinson and her relationship with Virginia Woolf. The 40 page afterword gives some good insights and analysis of Violet Dickinson's life and the three short stories, and I enjoyed that as well as the first story, Friendships Gallery, the most.
The afterword notes that Leonard Woolf, when offered a couple of times to publish The Life of Violet, remarked "that the work was only 'a kind of private joke, and not very good.'" Ultimately this is true; but silly short private jokes between Virginia Woolf and her friends are exactly the kind of things I am interested in reading.
The book blurb doesn't quite deliver on what it hypes the book up to be. Nonetheless, the unique historical value and insight warrants the 4 star rating more than anything else this book has to offer.
so, anyone who knows me understands that I have a profound love for Virginia Woolf, particularly her letters and diaries. When I heard about these undiscovered writings, oh, my god, the joy I felt! NEW Woolf? Is this an early christmas present from the literary gods?
After reading this, I...well, the stories are very much intended for an audience of one, the woman Virginia was closest to in her 20's. They are filled with inside jokes that no doubt delighted Violet, but didn't really resonate with this reader. The thrilling bits are flashes of the wit and brilliance to come in the writing of Woolf's 30's and beyond, and the afterword is fantastic and frames the stories beautifully.
I'm so pleased to have read these, but I would in no way recommend them as a first foray into Woolf, or even to anyone who isn't already a little in love with her writing.
Rating this book doesn't quite seem right: though Virginia made a final draft that was edited and put together to form a finished piece of fiction, she never sought to get it published, or have it read by the general public. It was an inside joke essentially, and not written to be judged and rated.
Considering that, I truthfully did not enjoy it; it seemed a little nonsensical and directionless, but as it had a right to be: she wrote it as a little mock biography for her and Violet and maybe some other friends to laugh at, not for me to read and think critically about.
The preface and afterword were interesting, and I wonder if the book should not be advertised more as a miniature commentary or biography on Virginia and Violet and their relationship, rather than a piece of VW's fiction; more pages are comprised of Seshagiri's thoughts on the stories than the stories themselves.
These three stories are beautifully written, with touches of irony and wit, giving an insight into the lives of the British upper crust in prewar years in the first of the tales. The third story is a strange fantasy that is, perhaps, an allegory of our civilisation, highlighting the things that divide us and our lack of understanding of the world and each other. Discovered only recently, these manuscripts were written when Virginia Woolf was in her very early 20s and presage the literary greatness that she went on to acquire. They are, though, of their time in style and rhythm. Some will find them fascinating; others may find them rather too slow. I leave it to the reader to judge.
While reading this book, and particularly the first two short stories in it, I was reminded again of how much I like Virginia's writing. It reminded me again of her fluidity, originality and eloquence. Her humour (particularly in the forefront these short stories), wit and intelligence. While reading it I immediately resolved to read some of her works again this year! I would not recommend this for starters on Woolf those. Although this is very short, there is a lot of context arround it and she was very young while writing this so it is not to be compared with her latr works, I think. However still very impressive considering the fact that she was so young writing them.